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Crosier Village Roman Catholic Priory Church of the Holy Cross
Phoenix
AZ
85040
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Who we are
The Crosiers in Phoenix live and pray together at Crosier Village, 717 E. Southern Ave., Phoenix 85040. Our members are involved in a wide range of ministries serving the Church and those in need, including assisting in local parishes, retreat work, spiritual direction, elder care, campus ministry, immigrant services, jail ministry and visiting memory care patients.
To help us expand our ministry and service, the Crosier Village of Phoenix corporation was established. In 2016, the corporation purchased the historic South Mountain Community Church and its accompanying facilities. Here, we established a permanent home where we have been able to substantially expand services in the South Phoenix and surrounding communities.
Priory Church of the Holy Cross
This historic church was built in 1944 and can accommodate 100 individuals for daily worship. Antique bench pews add to the intimacy of the setting. With cosmetic improvements and minor repairs to the church, choir loft, narthex, we established a spiritual community where the public can worship with us.
Adjacent to the church is the Campo Family Community Resource Center, a 3,000-square-foot space with a self-catering kitchen. The hall offers essential space for Crosier programs and celebrations and is available to rent for private gatherings.
To help us expand our ministry and service, the Crosier Village of Phoenix corporation was established. In 2016, the corporation purchased the historic South Mountain Community Church and its accompanying facilities. Here, we established a permanent home where we have been able to substantially expand services in the South Phoenix and surrounding communities.
Priory Church of the Holy Cross
This historic church was built in 1944 and can accommodate 100 individuals for daily worship. Antique bench pews add to the intimacy of the setting. With cosmetic improvements and minor repairs to the church, choir loft, narthex, we established a spiritual community where the public can worship with us.
Adjacent to the church is the Campo Family Community Resource Center, a 3,000-square-foot space with a self-catering kitchen. The hall offers essential space for Crosier programs and celebrations and is available to rent for private gatherings.
Street Address
717 East Southern Avenue
Phoenix,
AZ
85040
United States
Phone: (602) 443-7100
Download Crosier Village Roman Catholic Priory Church of the Holy Cross vCard with Mass Times
Church Pastor
Thomas Enneking, osc
Conventual Prior
717 East Southern Avenue
Phoenix,
AZ
85040
United States
Phone: (602) 443-7100
Download Conventual Prior Thomas Enneking, osc vCard with Bio
Quote of the Day
1 Corinthians 13:13
And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity.
And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity.
Denomination
Roman Catholic
Roman Catholic churches in Phoenix, Arizona, United States
Roman Catholic churches in Arizona, United States
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All churches in Phoenix, AZ
Affiliations:
Crosier Fathers & Brothers
Website:
Social Media
Crosier Village Roman Catholic Priory Church of the Holy Cross Phoenix on YouTube
Leadership
Leader Name:
Thomas Enneking, osc
Leader Position:
Conventual Prior
Formal Title:
Leader Address:
Tel:
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Leader Email:
Leader Bio:
Very Rev. Thomas Enneking, osc, has been a member of the Crosier Fathers and Brothers since 1976. He was born and raised on a dairy farm in central Minnesota. During his childhood, his parents formed a family band with their six children. This background laid the foundation for a love of music and liturgy. He obtained a Bachelor of Science degree in music and psychology in 1980 and has used his musical skills as a liturgical music publisher. He has published a variety of liturgical and musical publications, especially those used by the Crosiers in their liturgical prayer.
He earned a Master of Arts in Pastoral Liturgy in 1984 along with a Master of Divinity. Fr. Tom served as vocation director and post-novitiate formation director. He also served as director of The Welcome Center, a multicultural ministry established by the Crosiers in collaboration with the parish of St. Odilia in St. Paul, Minnesota.
For a period, he was assigned to Brazil where he worked as Crosier novice director and post-novitiate formation director. This experience required that he learn to speak Brazilian Portuguese. He has been engaged in ministry with the Hispanic community in the United States for more than 25 years, gaining fluency in Spanish as well as familiarity with a variety of cultural patterns within the Latino community.
Fr. Tom was elected prior provincial of the Crosiers in 2011 and led the efforts to establish Crosier Village, a new foundation for the Crosiers in the heart of South Phoenix. In 2018, he was elected the national superior of the Crosiers in the United States under the title of conventual prior. He is the immediate superior of the 38 Crosiers who live in the United States.
He earned a Master of Arts in Pastoral Liturgy in 1984 along with a Master of Divinity. Fr. Tom served as vocation director and post-novitiate formation director. He also served as director of The Welcome Center, a multicultural ministry established by the Crosiers in collaboration with the parish of St. Odilia in St. Paul, Minnesota.
For a period, he was assigned to Brazil where he worked as Crosier novice director and post-novitiate formation director. This experience required that he learn to speak Brazilian Portuguese. He has been engaged in ministry with the Hispanic community in the United States for more than 25 years, gaining fluency in Spanish as well as familiarity with a variety of cultural patterns within the Latino community.
Fr. Tom was elected prior provincial of the Crosiers in 2011 and led the efforts to establish Crosier Village, a new foundation for the Crosiers in the heart of South Phoenix. In 2018, he was elected the national superior of the Crosiers in the United States under the title of conventual prior. He is the immediate superior of the 38 Crosiers who live in the United States.
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Crosier Village Roman Catholic Priory Church of the Holy Cross Leadership Photos
Administration
Admin Name:
Karina Penaranda
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Mailing Address
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Crosier Village Roman Catholic Priory Church of the Holy Cross Phoenix Mass Times
The priory church is open for in-person worship services! We look forward to seeing you!
Those unable to attend in person are still encouraged to celebrate with the Crosiers via live stream on YouTube Channel, Crosiers1210.
MONDAY - SUNDAY
7:30 a.m. Morning Prayer
8:00 a.m. Mass (English)
10:30 a.m. (Bilingual Mass Sundays only)
5:00 pm Evening Prayer
Cultural
12:45 p.m. Indonesian Mass (not bilingual) — the second Sunday of every month
Mass Times last updated on the 25th of February, 2024
Those unable to attend in person are still encouraged to celebrate with the Crosiers via live stream on YouTube Channel, Crosiers1210.
MONDAY - SUNDAY
7:30 a.m. Morning Prayer
8:00 a.m. Mass (English)
10:30 a.m. (Bilingual Mass Sundays only)
5:00 pm Evening Prayer
Cultural
12:45 p.m. Indonesian Mass (not bilingual) — the second Sunday of every month
Mass Times last updated on the 25th of February, 2024
Worship Languages
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Children and Youth Activities
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Under 18s:
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Other activities & ministries
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Crosier Village Roman Catholic Priory Church of the Holy Cross Photo Gallery
Crosier Village Roman Catholic Priory Church of the Holy Cross History
The Order was founded in 1210 by Blessed Theodore de Celles and his companions.
The name Crosier is derived from the French word croisés, which means signed with the Cross. In medieval England, Crosiers were known as the Crutched (crossed) Friars. The designation refers to the Cross and the spirituality of the Order.
Our primary feast day is the Exaltation of the Holy Cross, which reflects a spirituality focused on the triumphant cross of Christ and our glorified Lord. A distinctive mark of the Crosiers is the red and white crusaders’ cross worn on the scapular of our religious habit.
I - Medieval Times
The first period of Crosier history, during medieval times, was one of growth.
Blessed Theodore and four companions came from Liège in Belgium and formed a community near the city of Huy called Clairlieu. They were influenced by the fraternal life movement in the Church at the time that led to the founding of the Franciscans, the Dominicans and the Carmelites. Their vision was to live a life of prayer and pastoral service as brothers inspired by the spirituality of the Holy Cross. Adopting the Rule of St. Augustine, they established other communities, serving churches throughout Europe. At one time there were as many as 90 Crosier communities. Crosiers were involved in the running of inns for travelers and those on pilgrimage. While the motherhouse remained at Huy for much of the Order’s history, there was also a significant Crosier presence in France (Paris and Toulouse), in the Rhineland (Cologne), in England (London) and in the Low Countries.
II - Crosier Reform
The second period of the Order’s history was ushered in by a reform initiated at the 1410 General Chapter.
This reform, influenced by a spiritual movement called the devotio moderna, was spearheaded by the Priory of St. Agatha in the Netherlands and was typified by a very personal devotional spirituality. While the house at Huy remained the motherhouse, St. Agatha became the spiritual center of a reformed and revitalized Order. During the Protestant Reformation, many Crosier priories and churches were suppressed, and under Henry VIII all the houses in England were confiscated. By the end of the 18th century, the French Revolution and the subsequent Napoleonic reforms further reduced the number of Crosiers. By the early 1800s only two priories remained, St. Agatha and another in Uden, also in the Netherlands. By 1840, because secular authorities had forbidden men to join, only four elderly Crosiers remained.
III - Modern Era
The modern era began in 1840 when the law forbidding the reception of new members was repealed and surprising numbers joined the Order, some of them diocesan priests who believed all along they had a call to religious life.
The modern era began in 1840 when the law forbidding the reception of new members was repealed and surprising numbers joined the Order, some of them diocesan priests who believed all along they had a call to religious life. Henricus van den Wijmelenberg was one of them. Before long, this new Crosier was appointed superior, and then, in 1841, he was named Commissary General of the revitalized Order. Houses were reestablished in Belgium and the Netherlands and beyond.
In 1850 Fr. Van den Wijmelenberg sent priests and brothers to Wisconsin to work among the Dutch and Belgian immigrants who had settled in the Green Bay area. Along the Fox River, Fr. Edward Daems, osc, tried to establish a priory, but plans were abandoned when the Civil War began. A second attempt to establish an American presence by the Crosiers came in 1910. In 1922, a priory and school were established in Onamia, Minn., 90 miles north of Minneapolis. At the same time, men were sent into other parts of the world as well, beginning missions in the Belgian Congo (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo) in 1920; sending Crosiers to the island of Java in Indonesia in 1926; and, in 1934, establishing a presence in Brazil. Since 1958, Crosiers have worked in the Diocese of Agats-Asmat in the West Papua region of Indonesia.
Today, the worldwide Order of the Holy Cross has communities in Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Congo, Germany, Indonesia, the Netherlands, and the United States. There are about 400 Crosiers throughout the world. The residence (Generalate) of the Master General is in Rome, at the Church of San Giorgio in Velabro, a seventh-century basilica the Order has cared for since 1939.
To confirm our desire and commitment to develop a thriving permanent presence in Phoenix, we purchased property on Campbell Avenue near 24th Street where our members resided and worshiped.
In 2000, the Order began consolidating the smaller Crosier communities throughout the United States to build two vibrant communities in Onamia, Minnesota, and in Phoenix. Having communities in Onamia and Phoenix provided the perfect balance of rural and urban, offering established history and a place where new ministries and the needs of the larger community could be nurtured and met. The consolidation gave our members an environment in which to share a regular and daily rhythm of coming together for prayer, fellowship and service. It also allowed the opportunity for outreach and service to the broader communities where we lived.
The Crosiers' national headquarters in Phoenix
The Crosier Community of Phoenix was officially established in 1983 although individual Crosiers had already been serving within the Diocese of Phoenix. At the time, the Phoenix Crosier community was relatively small, comprised of elder Crosiers who assisted in several parishes. We recognized there were more ways in which we could serve the diocese and the people of Arizona, particularly the elderly and ethnic communities.
The name Crosier is derived from the French word croisés, which means signed with the Cross. In medieval England, Crosiers were known as the Crutched (crossed) Friars. The designation refers to the Cross and the spirituality of the Order.
Our primary feast day is the Exaltation of the Holy Cross, which reflects a spirituality focused on the triumphant cross of Christ and our glorified Lord. A distinctive mark of the Crosiers is the red and white crusaders’ cross worn on the scapular of our religious habit.
I - Medieval Times
The first period of Crosier history, during medieval times, was one of growth.
Blessed Theodore and four companions came from Liège in Belgium and formed a community near the city of Huy called Clairlieu. They were influenced by the fraternal life movement in the Church at the time that led to the founding of the Franciscans, the Dominicans and the Carmelites. Their vision was to live a life of prayer and pastoral service as brothers inspired by the spirituality of the Holy Cross. Adopting the Rule of St. Augustine, they established other communities, serving churches throughout Europe. At one time there were as many as 90 Crosier communities. Crosiers were involved in the running of inns for travelers and those on pilgrimage. While the motherhouse remained at Huy for much of the Order’s history, there was also a significant Crosier presence in France (Paris and Toulouse), in the Rhineland (Cologne), in England (London) and in the Low Countries.
II - Crosier Reform
The second period of the Order’s history was ushered in by a reform initiated at the 1410 General Chapter.
This reform, influenced by a spiritual movement called the devotio moderna, was spearheaded by the Priory of St. Agatha in the Netherlands and was typified by a very personal devotional spirituality. While the house at Huy remained the motherhouse, St. Agatha became the spiritual center of a reformed and revitalized Order. During the Protestant Reformation, many Crosier priories and churches were suppressed, and under Henry VIII all the houses in England were confiscated. By the end of the 18th century, the French Revolution and the subsequent Napoleonic reforms further reduced the number of Crosiers. By the early 1800s only two priories remained, St. Agatha and another in Uden, also in the Netherlands. By 1840, because secular authorities had forbidden men to join, only four elderly Crosiers remained.
III - Modern Era
The modern era began in 1840 when the law forbidding the reception of new members was repealed and surprising numbers joined the Order, some of them diocesan priests who believed all along they had a call to religious life.
The modern era began in 1840 when the law forbidding the reception of new members was repealed and surprising numbers joined the Order, some of them diocesan priests who believed all along they had a call to religious life. Henricus van den Wijmelenberg was one of them. Before long, this new Crosier was appointed superior, and then, in 1841, he was named Commissary General of the revitalized Order. Houses were reestablished in Belgium and the Netherlands and beyond.
In 1850 Fr. Van den Wijmelenberg sent priests and brothers to Wisconsin to work among the Dutch and Belgian immigrants who had settled in the Green Bay area. Along the Fox River, Fr. Edward Daems, osc, tried to establish a priory, but plans were abandoned when the Civil War began. A second attempt to establish an American presence by the Crosiers came in 1910. In 1922, a priory and school were established in Onamia, Minn., 90 miles north of Minneapolis. At the same time, men were sent into other parts of the world as well, beginning missions in the Belgian Congo (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo) in 1920; sending Crosiers to the island of Java in Indonesia in 1926; and, in 1934, establishing a presence in Brazil. Since 1958, Crosiers have worked in the Diocese of Agats-Asmat in the West Papua region of Indonesia.
Today, the worldwide Order of the Holy Cross has communities in Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Congo, Germany, Indonesia, the Netherlands, and the United States. There are about 400 Crosiers throughout the world. The residence (Generalate) of the Master General is in Rome, at the Church of San Giorgio in Velabro, a seventh-century basilica the Order has cared for since 1939.
To confirm our desire and commitment to develop a thriving permanent presence in Phoenix, we purchased property on Campbell Avenue near 24th Street where our members resided and worshiped.
In 2000, the Order began consolidating the smaller Crosier communities throughout the United States to build two vibrant communities in Onamia, Minnesota, and in Phoenix. Having communities in Onamia and Phoenix provided the perfect balance of rural and urban, offering established history and a place where new ministries and the needs of the larger community could be nurtured and met. The consolidation gave our members an environment in which to share a regular and daily rhythm of coming together for prayer, fellowship and service. It also allowed the opportunity for outreach and service to the broader communities where we lived.
The Crosiers' national headquarters in Phoenix
The Crosier Community of Phoenix was officially established in 1983 although individual Crosiers had already been serving within the Diocese of Phoenix. At the time, the Phoenix Crosier community was relatively small, comprised of elder Crosiers who assisted in several parishes. We recognized there were more ways in which we could serve the diocese and the people of Arizona, particularly the elderly and ethnic communities.
Crosier Village Roman Catholic Priory Church of the Holy Cross Historical Photos
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